Acianthus apprimus
Acianthus apprimus, commonly known as early mosquito orchid, is a species of flowering plant in the orchid family Orchidaceae and is endemic to New South Wales in Australia. It is a terrestrial herb with a single, heart-shaped leaf and between two and nine translucent pinkish flowers with reddish markings and is found in disjunct populations around the state.
Description
Acianthus apprimus is a terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, sympodial herb with a single heart-shaped, glabrous, dark green leaf which is reddish-purple on its lower surface. The leaf is long, wide on a stalk high.There are between two and nine flowers, well-spaced on a raceme tall, each flower long and about across. The dorsal sepal is egg-shaped, long, wide, forms a hood over the column and is translucent pink with reddish veins and markings. The lateral sepals are long, pinkish with a red stripe down the centre and cross each other below the labellum. The petals are a similar colour, about long and project forward. The labellum is dark purplish-red to almost black, egg-shaped to lance-shaped, has a thick, fleshy callus covering most of the central area and many small pimple-like papillae on the outer half. It is long, wide with its edges turned under. This is one of the earliest-flowering Acianthus species and although it resembles Acianthus fornicatus, usually flowers between February and April, before the leaves of that species have emerged above ground. The capsule that develops is long and wide.
This species is distinguished from the similar Acianthus fornicatus by its folded labellum which leaves only the callus in view, and by its very early flowering period - A. fornicatus flowers from May to August.